House debates
Monday, 11 September 2017
Questions without Notice
Centrelink
2:20 pm
Alan Tudge (Aston, Liberal Party, Minister for Human Services) Share this | Hansard source
We started with a focus on the student payments, and already we are seeing the processing times for student claims halved. Just this month was the first time we have had a straight-through process of a claim, and by the end of this year about 10 per cent of all claims will be straight-through processed, which means they will be instantaneously done. We have introduced a claim tracker so that people can monitor their claim on their phone without having to call the call centre. We have introduced a virtual assistant, which means you get an instantaneous answer on your computer. Since June alone, 95,000 questions have been answered through that virtual assistant. We are moving on to the other large programs payments and doing a similar size transformation. We will soon be doing Newstart, then the age pension and then the disability support pension and other payments.
We're not just waiting for those longer term transformations but are doing the hard work now to streamline our processes. Specifically, we have re-engineered the claims processes for the farm household allowance, for the disability support pension and for the age pension. For DSP alone, we have cut the claim-processing time by half for most claims. The farm household allowance claims have been cut from four months to four weeks. On call-waiting times: as we announced in the budget, we are adding 250 additional staff, who will be progressively rolled out over the next few months.
The member mentioned the my.gov.au site. I can inform the member for Denison that we have done a complete overhaul of that site. You should take a look at it on your mobile phone. Just today we expect 265,000 people to log on to myGov, which is an increase from about 165,000 people just 12 months previously. About 10 million people are on myGov and transact digitally. This is a government that is delivering for Australians on the things that matter. (Time expired)
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